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What to expect at Post Malone’s The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2: Setlist, start time and more

Jul 15, 2026

·

Mary Callahan

A Post Malone stadium show does not stay in one mood for long. It can jump from "I Fall Apart" to the country swing of "Pour Me a Drink" and then right back into a full-roar singalong for "Sunflower" or "Congratulations." That shape is the real appeal of The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2, a set that treats Post's country era as one chapter in a much bigger live catalog.

Now that the 2026 North American stadium leg is deep into July, fans have real show data to work from. Here is what to know about the remaining dates, the openers, the current setlist, stage times, show length and how to find Post Malone tickets on SeatGeek.

Ultimate guide to Post Malone’s “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2”

The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2 is Post Malone and Jelly Roll's 2026 return to the stadium run that became Post's highest-attended and best-selling tour to date. The previous run drew more than one million fans across North America and grossed more than $170 million. Carter Faith was added for all headlining dates on Part 2.

This is still a country-leaning live era because of F-1 Trillion, but the show itself is much broader than that. Recent stadium dates have mixed newer country material with rap, pop and rock-era staples, which is why the night feels more like a career-spanning Post Malone set than a one-album showcase.

Remaining Post Malone stadium dates and openers

The table below covers the remaining North American stadium dates on this leg after the July 15 Kansas City show. It does not represent Post Malone’s full 2026 touring calendar, which also includes later festival and international appearances.

Date

City

Venue

Openers

Friday, July 17

Ames, IA

Jack Trice Stadium

Jelly Roll, Carter Faith

Tuesday, July 21

Missoula, MT

Washington-Grizzly Stadium

Jelly Roll, Carter Faith

Friday, July 24

Edmonton, AB

Commonwealth Stadium

Jelly Roll, Carter Faith

Saturday, July 25

Edmonton, AB

Commonwealth Stadium

Jelly Roll, Carter Faith

Tuesday, July 28

Salt Lake City, UT

Rice-Eccles Stadium

Jelly Roll, Carter Faith

Who is opening for Post Malone on “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2”?

Carter Faith opens the night with a modern country sound rooted in sharp songwriting, warm vocals and a classic Nashville feel. Her set is the first part of the evening, so arriving early is worth it if you want the full show.

Jelly Roll is more than a standard opener on this tour. His supporting set has felt closer to a second headliner than a brief warmup, with emotionally charged songs like "Liar," "I Am Not Okay," "Need a Favor" and "Save Me" landing with full-stadium weight. For many fans, his portion of the night is reason enough to be inside before the listed start time.

Because support can vary at festivals and select dates, confirm your opener lineup on SeatGeek or your venue’s event page before heading out.

What time does Post Malone go on stage?

For standard headlining stadium dates, Post has generally been taking the stage shortly after 9 p.m. local time, even when the event itself is listed for 7:00 or 7:30 p.m. That gap accounts for Carter Faith's set, Jelly Roll's set and the changeover before Post walks out.

Festival timing can be earlier and follows the schedule of the individual event.

That does not mean fans should plan to arrive at 9 p.m. Carter Faith and Jelly Roll are major parts of the night, and stadium entry can take longer than expected. If you want the full show, plan to be through security and near your seat before the time printed on your ticket.

How long is a Post Malone concert?

At standalone stadium dates, Post Malone’s headlining set has generally lasted about 90 minutes to nearly two hours.

Festival appearances follow a different format. Those sets can be shorter depending on the event schedule, so fans should not assume every Post Malone appearance will last as long as a standalone stadium show.

The full night is considerably longer than Post’s set alone. Once you account for stadium entry, Carter Faith, Jelly Roll, changeovers and the slow exit with tens of thousands of other fans, this is a full-evening commitment rather than a quick concert.

Post Malone “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2” setlist

The 2026 setlist has settled into a clear shape across recent headlining stadium dates. It leans on “F-1 Trillion” but still makes plenty of room for the songs that turned Post into a stadium artist in the first place.

The exact order and song selection can change by city, but fans can reasonably expect a set close to the following based on recent shows in Indianapolis and Toronto.

Song

What to know

“Better Now”

One of the biggest crossover hits still holding a regular early spot

“Wrong Ones”

A recurring “F-1 Trillion” selection

“Go Flex”

A longtime fan favorite that has stayed in recent shows

“Hollywood’s Bleeding”

Part of the darker early-to-mid-set stretch

“I Fall Apart”

Still one of the emotional centerpieces of the show

“Losers”

A regular part of the set, often performed with Jelly Roll

“Goodbyes”

A recurring “Hollywood’s Bleeding” selection

“What Don’t Belong to Me”

One of the newer country songs that has remained in rotation

“I Ain’t Comin’ Back”

Post’s collaboration with Morgan Wallen from Wallen’s “I’m the Problem”

“Stay”

An older, quieter song that has appeared at recent stops

“Feeling Whitney”

A stripped-back reset before the late-show push

“Circles”

One of the biggest full-stadium singalongs

“White Iverson”

A defining early hit that still anchors the older side of the set

“Psycho”

A reliable late-set favorite from the pop-rap catalog

“Candy Paint”

A recurring inclusion at several reported shows

“Pour Me a Drink”

One of the newer country songs most suited to a live crowd

“Dead at the Honky Tonk”

A current-era song that helps define the country side of the show

“rockstar”

One of the biggest late-show releases

“I Had Some Help”

A major crowd peak from the “F-1 Trillion” era

“Sunflower”

A near-lock for the closing stretch

“Congratulations”

A regular closer and one of the night’s final singalongs

Some dates have included small variations, so treat this as a strong guide rather than a guaranteed song-for-song order.

What songs from “F-1 Trillion” does Post Malone play?

Recent stadium sets have consistently included “Wrong Ones,” “Losers,” “What Don’t Belong to Me,” “Dead at the Honky Tonk” and “I Had Some Help.” “Pour Me a Drink” has also appeared frequently, though the exact mix can change by date.

The country material does not take over the entire show. It is woven into a much broader set, which is exactly why the tour works for fans who came in through different versions of Post Malone.

Does Post Malone play older hits?

Absolutely. Recent setlists have kept older staples like "Better Now," "Go Flex," "Hollywood's Bleeding," "I Fall Apart," "Goodbyes," "Feeling Whitney," "Circles," "White Iverson," "Psycho," "rockstar," "Sunflower" and "Congratulations" in heavy rotation.

That balance is the whole point of Part 2. You are not buying a ticket to hear only the country pivot. You are buying into a set that keeps jumping across eras without sounding scattered.

Does Post Malone perform any covers or surprise songs?

Recent sets have included “I Ain’t Comin’ Back,” Post Malone’s collaboration with Morgan Wallen from Wallen’s album “I’m the Problem.”

Beyond that, the broader structure of the show has stayed relatively stable. This is not a tour built around a formal nightly cover or surprise-song segment, so any guest appearance or one-off addition should be treated as a bonus rather than something to expect.

Is there an encore at Post Malone’s “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2”?

Recent headlining shows have generally used a straight-through finish instead of a long, traditional walk-off-and-return encore. That does not make the ending feel smaller.

The closing stretch has included several of the songs most fans are waiting for, with “rockstar,” “I Had Some Help,” “Sunflower” and “Congratulations” all appearing late in recent sets. Leaving early to beat stadium traffic can mean missing the loudest part of the night.

What is “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2” production like?

The show is built for stadium scale. The show is built for stadium scale, with pyrotechnics, large screens, a full live band and production designed to carry across football stadiums and ballparks.

The visual payoffs tend to land alongside songs that already have stadium-wide singalong energy. Fire, screens and crowd noise peak together during the biggest late-show hits, but Post still leaves room for quieter songs and less polished moments.

That contrast suits his stage presence. Even with the production firing around him, the show does not feel like a rigidly choreographed pop spectacle. Post still performs as though he is feeling his way through the songs alongside the crowd.

When should you arrive for Post Malone’s concert?

This stadium run requires more planning than a quick arena night. With Carter Faith, Jelly Roll and Post all on the bill, the night has enough shape to reward people who show up on time. If you want merch, drinks or a little room for traffic and security, getting there 90 minutes before the listed start is a smart target. If you know the venue and plan to head straight to your section, about an hour can work, but that gives you less margin for long stadium lines or slow mobile service at the gates.

What should you bring to a Post Malone concert?

Bring your mobile ticket, a fully charged phone and shoes you trust for a long stadium night. Add ID, a card and a small venue-approved bag if you need one. For outdoor dates, check the weather before you leave. A hot July parking-lot walk in Ames or Salt Lake City asks for different planning than a cooler evening in Edmonton, and the wrong layer choice can make a three-hour show feel a lot longer.

What should fans wear to “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2”?

This crowd usually lands somewhere between country-night and lived-in festival casual. Denim, boots, vintage tees, trucker hats, workwear, camo and a little rhinestone energy all make sense here. The main rule is comfort. Post's audience covers a lot of stylistic ground, so nobody needs to look like they are trying out for a costume contest. Wear something that can handle stairs, concrete and a few hours on your feet.

Is Post Malone’s “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2” good for younger fans?

It can be, especially for teens who know both the older hits and the newer country songs. But parents should still treat this as what it is: a loud, late, full-scale stadium concert with multiple artists, heavy crowd energy and a post-show exit that can take a while at venues this size.

Assigned seats are usually easier than the floor for younger fans or first-time concertgoers. Ear protection is worth packing, and so is a clear pickup plan if you are dealing with a packed rideshare zone after the show.

How to get Post Malone tickets on SeatGeek

For a Post Malone stadium show, the seat changes the feel of the night. Floor seats put you inside the rush of the crowd, while lower-bowl seats often give you a better read on the screens, pyro and how the whole stadium reacts when the biggest songs land.

  1. Go to SeatGeek.com or open the SeatGeek app and search for “Post Malone.”

  2. Select the “The BIG ASS Stadium Tour Part 2” date and city you want to attend.

  3. Use the interactive seat map to compare sections, rows and prices.

  4. Check Deal Score to identify Post Malone tickets that offer strong value for the seat location.

  5. Use filters to sort by price, ticket quantity, section or other preferences.

  6. Review the full ticket details, including all-in pricing, before checkout.

  7. Buy your tickets and follow the delivery instructions in your SeatGeek account.

  8. Before the show, make sure your mobile tickets are ready and your phone is charged.

Eligible purchases are backed by SeatGeek’s Buyer Guarantee, which covers valid entry, accurate tickets and delivery in time for the event.

What makes this tour worth the planning is that Post still sounds like several different artists living inside the same set. When the night moves from the ache of “I Fall Apart” into the closing surge of “Sunflower” and “Congratulations,” it stops feeling like a genre experiment and starts feeling like the rare stadium show big enough to hold every side of Post Malone at once.